Christopher Durang
POISON PEN
I have been reading and watching Christopher Durang's plays for
over twenty-five years now, ever since he entered the playwriting
program of the Yale School of
Drama in the early seventies when I was Dean. I write this less
in the role of Artistic Director or critic than of proud parent.
Durang was a member of a now legendary class, many of whose
members not only performed, directed, and designed his work at the
School and the Yale Rep, but were to be his regular collaborators for
many years to come. He is a famously loyal friend, but also someone
who is stimulated by talents compatible with his own.
In a sense, Durang set the tone for this witty and brilliant,
sometimes acerbic, sometimes disaffected generation. I once
described him as an angelic altar boy with poison leeching through
his writing fingers, which was my clumsy way of saying that behind
his shy and courteous demeanor lurks a literary Jack the Ripper. I
have recently come to realize that this characterization is only
marginally true. There is a great deal of anger in his work, all
right, often proceeding from genuine pain and wounded innocence. But
except on rare occasions - when a demon leaps out of his skin and
starts pitchforking some fatuous damned soul - Chris is much too
kindhearted to go for the jugular.
It's probably more accurate to describe him as a Catholic lapsarian, troubled
over the meaninglessness of life and heartsick over the absence of God - when
he is not being dumbstruck by His malevolence and delinquency. Durang's surrogate
Matt says it best in The Marriage of Bette and Boo:
"I don't think God punishes people for specific things. . . . I think he punishes
people in general, for no reason." This has a Doestoyevskian ring, doesn't
it? I've always suspected Durang of being the reincarnation of Ivan Karamazov,
assuming Dostoyevsky's heterodox character had been reborn in New Jersey,
educated at Harvard, and forced to achieve his liberal arts baccalaureate
by wading knee deep through the swamps of American pop culture.
Christopher Durang's unwashed brain is an uneasy compound of
Hollywood movies and sit-coms, Eugene Ionesco plays and Monty Python
skits. Like Ionesco, Durang certainly knows how many crimes are
committed in the name of language. (I adore the female analyst in
Beyond Therapy who for the life of her can't remember the word for
"Porpoise. Pompous. Pom Pom. Paparazzi. Polyester. Pollywog.
Olley olley oxen free. Patient. I'm sorry, I mean patient.") It
was Ionesco who told us that philology always leads to calamity. For
Durang calamity is more often the result of stupidity. Sudden
explosions of fury, followed by an overwhelming sense of relief, this
seems to be the trademark behavior not only of the playwright's
characters but of us who watch them. Perhaps of everybody.
Durang began his writing life as a parodist. In The Idiots
Karamazov (co-authored with his classmate, Albert Inaurato), he
turned his mocking eyes on the whole corpus of Russian and American
literature, fashioning the revenge of an innocent undergraduate who,
having had Dostoyevsky, Chekhov, Dickens, Anais Nin, Djuna Barnes,
James Joyce, and Eugene O'Neill force fed him for four years,
regurgitated them in the form of demented Cliff Notes. The four
Karamazov Brothers transform into the Three Sisters (with a touch of
the four Marx Brothers), Alyosha turns into Pip, Constance Garnett
into Miss Havisham, and Mrs. Karamazov becomes Mary Tyrone. It was
the first full-length Durang I ever read, and it still makes me laugh
out loud.
I shall never forget the two Yale productions of The Idiots
Karamazov. Both featured the divine Meryl Streep, a wart on her
nose, her eyes oozing gum, playing the "ancient translatrix"
Con-stance Garnett, bane of all lovers of Russian literature.
Brandishing her cane and fixing us all with a baleful scowl, she
concluded the action by circling the stage in her wheelchair,
screaming at the audience "Go home! GO HOME!" Lying in ruins on
stage was the detritus of Western literature, having been jammed into
some crazy blender which spewed it out as pulp and seeds.
It was assumed at this time that Durang's greatest talent was for
satiric cabarets. And, indeed, in his next play, The
Vietnamization of New Jersey, he ridiculed the anti-war plays of
the age, particularly Sticks and Bones by the hugely gifted
but (at the time) overly conscience-stricken David Rabe. The poster
we made for the Yale production was a sardonic variant on the famous
Norman Rockwell Thanksgiving dinner painting, this time featuring a
family you wouldn't dream of taking home with you, much less share a
drumstick with. Skewering right-wing warmongers and leftwing
guiltmongers alike, like Lenny Bruce before him, Durang managed to
make comedy out of the unthinkable and the unspeakable. The play
showed a brave, outspoken generation beginning to find its voice -
before political correctness gave it laryngitis by shoving a big
turkey bone down its throat.
Durang's preoccupation with dead babies (they first appear in American
Film) becomes an obsession in what is clearly his finest play to date,
the thinly disguised autobiographical drama The Marriage
of Bette and Boo. In this play, Durang reveals himself as another
child of O'Neill, entering the action as a character (he also entered the
first production as an actor) in much the same way O'Neill did in Long
Day's Journey and for much the same reasons. "Unless you go through all
the genuine anger you feel, both justified and unjustified," Durang wrote
in his poignant introduction to the play, "the feelings of love that you do
have will not have any legitimate base. . . . Plus, eventually you will go
crazy." The Marriage of Bette and Boo is a
touching tribute to a recently dead mother, to an alcoholic father, and to
a son who has finally learned to forgive his family and himself.
Baby with the Bathwater, which also deals with dead or
abused children, is another comedy about a dysfunctional family, an
emphasis which led one of Durang's critics (Benedict Nightingale) to
accuse him and other American dramatists of writing "diaper plays."
(An even more overworked and wrongheaded epithet for Durang is
"sophomoric.") But if Durang writes diaper plays, so did O'Neill,
Odets, Miller, Albee, and Williams. Indeed, the quintessential
American drama is and always has been a family drama - a work in
which the writer lays his ghosts to rest at last, making peace with
his past by exorcising the dead.
Chris is kind enough to mention in the preface to his collected
plays that I have always been a supporter of his work. Well, it is
true I recognized that each of his plays had special genius, if not
necessarily equal value. And thank God I did! Otherwise I might
have found myself in them. There is nothing that so damns a producer
(or a critic) to the lowest circle of a satirist's hell than failing
to recognize a genuine talent. Talent is not wanting in the plays of
Chris Durang, which are the product of a brilliant and daring
dramatic mind at work. And they make me very, very proud.
Robert Brustein is the Artistic Director of the A.R.T.